Names The
Passamaquoddy Nation, who had lived around and used the island for numerous centuries before European discovery used several names for the island including Muttoneguis, Muttoneguamus, Metanegwis, and Metnegwis. St. Croix became known as Bone Island in the 18th century after many of the graves were exposed by erosion. The island was neutral territory in the
War of 1812, leading it to be sometimes called Neutral Island.
Settlement by Europeans in 1607 The French noble
Pierre Dugua, Sieur de Mons, established a settlement on Saint Croix Island in June 1604 under the authority of
Henry IV, King of France. This outpost was one of the first attempts by France at year-round colonization in the territory they called
l'Acadie. Earlier attempts at
Charlesbourg-Royal in 1541 by
Jacques Cartier, at
Sable Island in 1598 by Marquis de La Roche-Mesgouez, and at
Tadoussac, Quebec, in 1600 by
François Gravé Du Pont, had failed. Cartographer
Samuel de Champlain was part of the Dugua expedition and settlement on the small river island in 1604. During the first winter there, 35 of the 79 settlers perished due to a "land-sickness" believed to be
scurvy. The following spring, Champlain and
François Gravé Du Pont moved the settlement to a new location on the southern shore of the
Bay of Fundy. Champlain had found the site during a shoreline reconnaissance for a more suitable site. Called
Port-Royal, it became the first European settlement in New France. In 1607,
Champlain left for France, never to return to
Acadia again. However, in 1608, Champlain set sail in his third voyage from France to establish a settlement on a site on the
Saint Lawrence River that later became
Québec; it became the first permanent European settlement in New France. In October 1613, after having burned the French mission at
Mount Desert Island,
Samuel Argall went on to burn the old French buildings that remained on Sainte-Croix before he moved on to raid Port Royal.
Boundary dispute During a boundary dispute between
Britain and the U.S. in 1797, the island was deemed to be under U.S. sovereignty by a survey of the river which determined it to be on the western side of its main channel. Canada issued a nationally circulating twenty-five cent piece in 2004 that commemorated the island and the beginnings of Acadia there. ==International historic site==